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NewsScots uni study finds young South Asians at higher risk of diabetes

Scots uni study finds young South Asians at higher risk of diabetes

ASIAN Indians are up to four times more likely than white Europeans to develop young-onset type 2 diabetes while having a normal BMI, according to a new study.

The research was carried out by the University of Dundee and Dr Mohan’s Diabetes Specialities Centres, the largest clinical network of diabetes care in India.

It showed for the first time that South Asians – and Asian Indians in particular – have a greater genetic burden of poor beta cell function.

Dr Moneeza Siddiqui, from Dundee’s School of Medicine
Dr Moneeza Siddiqui, from Dundee University’s School of Medicine.

Beta cells are found in the pancreas and secrete insulin in response to blood glucose levels.

In people with type 2 diabetes, beta cells must work harder to produce enough insulin to control high blood sugar levels.

This can lead to beta cells being unable to work properly to regulate blood sugar.

Most of the knowledge surrounding diabetes and its complications has been accumulated from studying with Western European ancestry, even though diabetes in Europeans is often different to Asians.

This is referred to as the ‘Asian Indian Phenotype.’

This situation led to the creation of INSPIRED, a £7m Dundee-led project that seeks to improve diabetes outcomes in India.

The project aims to achieve this by working to better understand who gets diabetes, how it progresses, why some people respond better than others to treatments, and why some patients develop complications.

INSPIRED has led to the creation of a bioresource of 20,000 Asian Indians with type 2 diabetes in India, which was used as one of the primary substrates of this research.

The newest INSPIRED study is the first to demonstrate that lean young-onset diabetes in non-migrant Asian Indians is 2-4 times more prevalent than in white Europeans.

In addition, they showed that young (under the age of 40) lean Asian Indians have markedly lower beta cell function and were therefore at greater risk of developing type 2 diabetes.

The researchers say that the additional burden of poor beta cell function and its role in diabetes onset should inform therapies and care for patients of Asian Indian and, more broadly, South Asian descent.

Dr Moneeza Siddiqui, from Dundee’s School of Medicine, said: “We tested the hypothesis that lower clinically and genetically determined beta cell function is associated with early onset diabetes in Asian Indians.

“We found that this association was robust and independent of other risk factors like insulin sensitivity, being overweight or obese, having a larger waist circumference, having a poor lipid profile, even having a family history of diabetes.

“The evidence of a greater genetic burden both in India and migrant South Asians who are part of the UK Biobank is compelling evidence that the underlying architecture of type 2 diabetes is different in South Asians.”

By 2045, an estimated 151m South Asians will have diabetes, and Asian Indians will form the largest sub-group of this population.

Migrant South Asians also have an increased risk of early-onset type 2 diabetes, often with lean BMI compared with white Europeans.

This contributes to the higher prevalence of diabetes in people of South Asian descent and the increasing burden of diabetes in South Asia.

Dr V. Mohan, Chairman of Dr Mohan’s Diabetes Specialities Centre and President of Madras Diabetes Research Foundation, Chennai, India, said: “The younger age at onset of type 2 diabetes in South Asians and the rapid loss of beta cell function resulting in a faster conversion from pre-diabetes to type 2 diabetes are well known.

“This paper is the first to demonstrate the role of genetics in beta-cell dysfunction for South Asians with diabetes. This could have important therapeutic implications as well.”

The research is published today in the journal Diabetologia.

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